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  • The Black Widow...

    8) These spiders are now kept by people with experiance, people who keep tarantulas and also people wantting to study up on them..These are avaliable on the market and they also come in many variations.. I dont recomend them to just anyone and if you do find one in your home please dont leave it there .. remove it with caution, the females can be very agressive. I have caught a few and kept them and the kids have learned alot from these creatures.. Seems to me the only time they will really bite a human is when there eggs and or babies are messed with or if you by chance brush up against one like under your covers or put your hand in something that they are in or if you mess with the females webb..I am posting this info for anyone who would like to know about them..  
     
    DESCRIPTION
    Adult -- Like all spiders, the black widow has 8 legs; however, males and females differ in appearance. Females are about 40 mm long with legs outstretched and have black, globular abdomens about 9 by 13 mm marked with a red or yellow hourglass shape underneath. Males are lighter in color and have a red or pale brown stripe down the middle of their backs from which white or yellow streaks radiate. Males are smaller (up to 30 mm long with legs outstretched). The male pedipalps (biting appendages at front of head) are noticeably swollen.
    Egg -- Eggs are incorporated into grayish, silken balls about 12 to 15 mm in diameter. These egg masses contain 200 to 900 eggs and are found in the spider's web.

    Nymph -- Entirely white at first, nymphs develop through five to eight instars. As they develop, nymphs become more similar in appearance to adult males, though smaller.

    BIOLOGY
    Distribution -- Though more abundant in the southern states, the black widow spider occurs throughout most of the Western Hemisphere. This species may hide in sheltered, dimly lit places such as barns, garages, basements, outdoor toilets, hollow stumps, rodent holes, trash, brush, and dense vegetation. Black widows usually seek dry, sheltered sites such as buildings during periods of cold weather.
    Feeding Habits -- This spider feeds primarily on insects and other arthropods but, when disturbed, it may bite people or animals.

    Damage -- The female black widow possesses a venom 15 times more potent than rattlesnake venom. The bite is like a pin prick but causes pain within a few minutes of the attack. The pain spreads rapidly to arms, legs, chest, back, and abdomen. Chills, vomiting, difficult respiration, profuse perspiration, delirium, partial paralysis, violent abdominal cramps and spasms may occur within a few hours of the bite. The victim usually recovers in 2 to 5 days; about 5% of all black widow attacks are fatal. The black widow, however, usually bites people only when its web is disturbed. Male black widows do not bite.

    Life History -- The black widow spider overwinters as a young adult in buildings or in sheltered places outdoors. In late spring, after a prolonged courtship, mating occurs. Soon afterward the female kills her mate and begins laying eggs. The grayish silken ball of eggs is attached to an irregular, tangled web with a funnel-shaped exit. Each female constructs 5 to 15 egg balls, each of which contains 200 to 900 eggs.

    Young spiders emerge from the ball in 10 to 30 days. They are cannibalistic at this stage. Only a few nymphs from each egg mass survive. They require 2 to 3 months to develop into adults. Older adults die the same summer or autumn after laying eggs. The new generation of adults survives through the winter.

    CONTROL
    Indoors, spiders and their webs can be vacuumed up without hazard. Outdoors and in outbuildings, caution must be used to avoid being bitten. In fields of fruit or vegetable crops where these spiders are known to be a problem, gloves should be worn as a safeguard against being bitten. Black widow spiders can also be killed with pesticidal sprays.

    Mother Blackwidow with babies..

  • #2
    Re: The Blacwidow...

    Now these are a spider that I am definitly not fond of. They were all over the place at the truss plant I use to work at. Talk about aggresive, they would actually come at you when you removed lumber from a lift and disturbed them. It is good though to see somebody who gives out acurate info without the fear or parinoia factor. Good job Barricuda. 8)

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    • #3
      Re: The Black Widow...

      8)Thanks Blackmarked, I just wanted people to know that there is alot of these being sold as pet spiders and i dont think they should be..Unless you are studying or doing lectures on them or keeping them for a good enough reason, i dont think just anyone should own them.. But i also put this info up so people would know more about them. There are alot of veriations of the widow, brown widows , red widows and alot of the black widows have veriations as to where they have red spots on the back with the red hour glass under the belly and also i have seen few here that have some white and there is a white widow also.. I can not stress enough unless you have been keeping hot spiders or have worked with them please dont get them as pets..
      This is the brown widow,Lactrodectus geometricus..

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      • #4
        Re: The Black Widow...

        And one more the red widow from North America, very venomous and on the pet trade also..


        Red Widow (Latrodectus bishopi)
        pic courtesy of Midwest Exotic pets.

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        • #5
          Re: The Black Widow...

          Man that red widow is cool looking, probably still as dangerous though eh. I know about brown and grey widows, when I worked in a produce department as a teenager we would sometimes find them in the grapes. Had to use extreme caution to get rid of them. Sorta miss woking there, got to see lots of weird creatures. Jumping banana spiders, a moth the size of a medium bat, rattle snakes in corn, and even one guy found a black cobra in some oriental vegies. :P

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          • #6
            Re: The Black Widow...

            ??? 8) By any chance is this the moth that you saw that was huge,, if not tell me what color it is or how it looked and il let you know what it was..

            The Polyphemus Moth, there is also one that looks almost like this one and its huge to, called the Emperor moth..

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            • #7
              Re: The Black Widow...

              Well barricuda that was a few years ago already and all I really remember is that it did have the giant eye spots but I think it was darker than that one with more pattern. Lived in the back room for a few days, it was affectionatly know as mothra and terrorized all the girls, lmao!!!

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              • #8
                Re: The Black Widow...

                8) The moth you see in the pic is the inside of its wings.. The outside of the wings are always darker or lighter.. Most of the moths like that around our house are darker on the outside almost a chacolate color, but then they do vary alot as we alos have ones that are a light gray color to.. They are huge and very awsome moths and we have them here in the summer all the time at night hanging around the porch lights and sometimes around the windows from the lights..Kids would always try to see who caught the biggest one and bring them in the house and it would be real funny as they would be fluttering all over and they would land on our heads or on the TV..
                Heres another one we always have around,, the Emperor moth..

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                • #9
                  Re: The Black Widow...

                  Now there is one spider, I really don't want to run into or keep as a pet!!!!!! b25.gif But the moths are pretty.

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                  • #10
                    Re: The Black Widow...

                    8) s35.gif Seems to be that time of the year again, first blackwidow of the season was crawling across my kitchen floor, so now shes in her new home, a pickle jar all made up nice and sweet for her...Good thing shes still a baby.. well see how she does... s15.gif

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                    • #11
                      Re: The Black Widow...

                      You can keep those!!!!! b25.gif I don't think I'll be keeping any of those. But hey, good luck. Hope he likes his new home!!! s12.gif

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                      • #12
                        Re: The Black Widow...

                        So this is a hands off kinda pet huh... lol
                        I had a black widow crawl up my arm when I was asleep and it woke me up scared the s*&t out of me... could not belive that... she had a big nest right next to our bed I could not belive that ether... Well I have been keeping a daddy long leg as a pet.. kinda', it lives in the corn in my room... I bring him home food (flys) that get stuck inbetween the windows and the air ducks that have the air conditioners... at my work.. They are so cold all you have to do is pick them up... put them in a jar and take them home....
                        well se ya..
                        Eric aka....red

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